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Organophosphates Poisoning

Tolulope Akinbo, Pharm.D., MPH

PGY1 Pharmacy Practice Resident

Summa Health System

Akron, OH

2

Objectives

By the end of this presentation, participants should be

able to:

Describe the symptoms of patients presenting with organophosphate

poisoning

Explain the mechanisms of toxicity for organophosphates

Explain the mechanisms of action for atropine and pralidoxime

Recommend a pharmacotherapeutic regimen for patients presenting

with organophosphate poisoning

Epidemiology

Three million organophosphate and carbamate agent

exposures worldwide

300,000 fatalities

In 2008, there were 8000 reported exposures in the

United States

< 15 deaths reported

In 2012, there 4150 calls for organophosphate and

carbamate exposures

3 deaths

3

Organophosphate sources

Domestic (often not life-threatening)

Surface sprays

Roach and other inset baits

Head lice shampoo

Industrial or occupational

Crop protection

Fumigation

Terrorism or Warfare

Sarin, tubin (E.g. Tokyo subway attack)

Very rapidly absorbed, deadly within minutes

4

Acetylcholine physiology

5

Normal metabolism of acetylcholine by acetylcholinesterase to choline and acetic acid.

From: The Clinical Basis of Medical Toxicology. Goldfrank's Toxicologic Emergencies, 10e, 2015

Mechanism of Cholinergic toxicity

6

Target Organ Toxicity. Casarett and Doull's Toxicology: The Basic Science of Poisons, 2013

Organophosphate pharmacokinetics

Onset/Duration: Depends on the agent’s rate of AChE

inhibition, route, potency and total dose

Oral/respiratory exposure

• Systemic effects

• Within 3 hours

Dermal exposure

• Often local effects (local diaphoresis, fasciculations)

• Systemic effects (if any), up to 12 hours

Toxic dose: ~5mL of concentrated form for agricultural

use

7

Organophosphate pharmacokinetics

Metabolism

Oxons

• Directly inhibit acetylcholinesterase

Thions

• Require desulfuration to the oxon form for maximal activity

Lipophilicity: can sequester in fats

Lengthened toxicity

Can “repoison” with redistribution

8

Features: Muscarinic vs. Nicotinic

9

Organophosphate poisoning symptoms

Cholinergic in nature (think DUMBBBELS or SLUDGE)

Bradycardia

Bronchospasm and expiratory wheezes

Diaphoresis

Miosis

Urination

Hyperperistalsis

• Abdominal cramps and diarrhea

Excessive lacrimation

Excitation (anxiety)

Excessive salivation

Fasciculations and skeletal muscle weakness

• Could lead to skeletal muscle paralysis (including respiratory muscles)

Convulsions

Coma

10

From: eChapters. Pharmacotherapy: A Pathophysiologic Approach, 9e, 2014

Life-threatening effects of organophosphate poisoning

Organophosphate poisoning: Diagnosis

Toxidrome

Based on physical exam and history

Clues

Simultaneous presence of muscarinic and nicotinic toxicity

Triad

• Miosis, bronchial secretions and muscle fasciculations

Laboratory measurement

Detection of organophosphorus metabolites in urine

• Para-nitrophenol or dialkyl phosphate

Erythrocyte cholinesterase activity

• Best correlates with neuronal AChE 12

Toxicity management

Decontaminate

Be careful when handling patient

• Gloves, aprons

Skin contamination

• Remove clothing

• Wash skin with copious amounts of soap and water

If ingested within the hour

Gastric lavage

Activated charcoal

13

Supportive treatment

Circulation, Airway, Breathing

Depolarizing paralysis in severe poisoning

• Intubation and Mechanical ventilation

– If possible, avoid depolarizing neuromuscular blockers

(e.g. Succinylcholine)

Increased secretions

• Atropine/glycopyrrolate

• Suctioning

Ventricular dysrhythmias, QT prolongation, Torsades

Other manifestations

Hypotension

• Pressors

Seizures

• Benzodiazepines (10mg diazepam recommended)

14

Pharmacologic treatment

Antimuscarinics

Atropine

Glycopyrrolate

Oxime therapy

Pralidoxime

Benzodiazepines

Diazepam

Lorazepam

Midazolam

15

Pharmacologic treatment: Atropine

Indicated in all symptomatic patients

Can be diagnostic

No effects on inhibited AChE or nicotinic receptors

Competitively blocks the actions of acetylcholine on

cholinergic and some central nervous system receptors

Alleviates bronchospasms and reduces bronchial secretions

Can substitute glycopyrrolate to avoid anticholinergic

toxicity

Dosing • 0.05mg to 0.1mg/kg in children younger than 12

• 2 to 5mg in adolescents and young adults

• Repeat every 5 to 10 minute intervals until bronchial secretions and

pulmonary rales resolve

– Could take days

16

Pharmacologic treatment: Pralidoxime

2-pyridine aldoxime (Pralidoxime or 2-PAM)

Initiate as soon as possible

• Prevents aging by reactivating enzymes

Breaks the covalent bond between the AChE and

organophosphate; regenerates enzyme activity

Reverses nicotinic effects and muscular weakness/paralysis

Dosing

• 30 mg/kg then a maintenance infusion of 8 mg/kg/hour

17

Pharmacologic treatment: Kits

18

Mark-1 Autoinjector

DuoDote™

Monitoring

Monitoring of vital signs

Measurement of ventilatory capacity

Blood gases

Pulse oximetry

Leukocyte count with differentials

• Pneumonia development

Chest radiographs

Degree of pulmonary edema

Check for development of hydrocarbon pneumonitis

19

Questions

20

References

King A, Aaron C. Organophosphates and Carbamate

Poisoning. Emerg Med Clin N Am. 2015; 33: 133-151

Chyka PA. Clinical Toxicology. In: DiPiro JT, Talbert

RL, Yee GC, Matzke GR, Wells BG, Posey LM, eds.

Pharmacotherapy: A Pathophysiologic Approach. 8th

ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2011:27-50.

US Department of Health and Human Services.

Chemical Hazards Emergency Medical Management

website.

http://www.chemm.nlm.nih.gov/antidote_nerveagents.ht

m. Accessed April 17, 2015.

21

Organophosphates Poisoning

Tolulope Akinbo, Pharm.D., MPH

PGY1 Pharmacy Practice Resident

Summa Health System

Akron, OH

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